Not completely your typical rum and coke. MB captain rum is pretty darn authentic to Captain Morgan spiced rum with just the right amount of boozy notes. The lime is present in the back like you want it to be and FLV cola assists with the citrus note. WF rum and cola help with the rum and sweetness of a cola. Swirl rounds out any sharpness. Soho you ask? WTF is soho doing in this mix? It darkens the rum a little more and gives it a dirty note that I wanted like drinking in a Caribbean bar.

Mix made for my dad. The original version had 0.15% INW Marzipan which is nice but overall I prefer it without. Orange also pairs fairly nicely if you keep it low.
It's not overly "tobacco" forward... so even someone that typically does not like tobacco or cigar vapes, may still enjoy this one. It's slightly sweet nutty with the lovely Smooth Vanilla note.

"Gun show" based idea. Daytime Frank came up with the idea of a 3 flavor, 3/5/7% idea so I went with soho as the start as soho is amazing at this %. Built it into a cheesecake and Raven Shadow Vapes wanted some blueberry, so there you go! its good of the shake, but I would let it sit about a week for the cheesecake to settle into the soho.

The Dunn Brothers were a group of brothers from Pawnee, Oklahoma who worked as Old West bounty hunters. They are best known for having killed George "Bittercreek" Newcomb and Charley Pierce, members of the Wild Bunch.

The brothers - Bee, Calvin, Dal, George and Bill Dunn - ran a boarding house near Ingalls and a meat market in Pawnee. Bill Dunn was the leader and the oldest of the brothers. By the 1890s the Dunn brothers were working as bounty hunters, although they had been involved in cattle rustling and robbery. Their teenaged sister Rose became romantically involved with "Bittercreek" Newcomb, having met him through her brothers. On May 2, 1895, when Newcomb and Charley Pierce rode up to the Dunn house to visit with Rose, the brothers shot and killed both outlaws as they dismounted. They then collected the bounty on both, believed to have been $5,000 each, mostly due to the notoriety of the gang by that time.

It is believed that on August 25, 1896, Bill Dunn led Deputy US Marshal Heck Thomas to the hideout of Bill Doolin. Some have speculated that Dunn murdered Doolin; however, official reports from the time discount this, indicating that Thomas actually killed him. By late that year, people around Pawnee had started complaining that the Dunn brothers were involved in rustling and robbery. Sheriff Frank Canton - a gunman with a substantial reputation who had previously arrested Bill Dunn for rustling - began investigating the claims.

On November 6, 1896, Bill Dunn rode into Pawnee intent on killing Sheriff Canton. As Canton walked out of a restaurant after having dinner, Bill Dunn fired two shots at him with a revolver, missing with both. Canton drew and quickly fired two shots, killing Dunn. The shooting was ruled self-defense. Bill Dunn's death effectively ended the bounty hunting for the Dunn brothers, as their already-questionable reputations suffered greatly.